Not quite finished "Emphyrio" yet but I think it is very good, as good as "Blue World" (and similar in some ways) and better than "Dragon Masters" which was only average.
8/10 in fact.I just started 'To Live Forever' from 1956...it's a good one.
Just finished "Eyes of the Overworld". Another good installment in the "Dying Earth" series marred by not always finding the prose style as engaging as I would have liked.
I notice that the sequel "Cugel's Saga" picks up where it's predecessor left off but was written nearly twenty years later. I have high hopes for it that the prose style will be up to the standards of "Lyonesse".
I thought Cugel, and the story of what happens to him, quite hilarious. Quite the anti-hero that made him an unusual and interesting protagonist. I found myself constantly flipping between rooting for him one minute and despising him the next.
The only thing I would say is be prepared for a much slower pace...I think now that i have read alot of his early period stuff its finally time to see what Lyonesse is like.
The only thing I would say is be prepared for a much slower pace...
I say "slow" in a good way, much like I would describe Brian Aldiss' "Heliconia" trilogy. Both I consider masterpieces though.I'm surprised to read the above comment. I'd never have called it "slow"
It's astonishing to me that so many people speak of great fondness of some of Vance's admittedly finest works, but no one has a mention for the small book of four tales that hooked me for the next fifty years. I am speaking of an anthology from the sixties called "Future Tense", which includes the uniquely promising Ullward's Retreat, the forgettable Dodkin's Job, and the extraordinary "Sail 25". Can't remember the fourth tale, but for one of my own four favorites accept "Moon Moth", prestigiously anthologized.
More power to Mr. Vance, as long as he may live.
It's astonishing to me that so many people speak of great fondness of some of Vance's admittedly finest works, but no one has a mention for the small book of four tales that hooked me for the next fifty years. I am speaking of an anthology from the sixties called "Future Tense", which includes the uniquely promising Ullward's Retreat, the forgettable Dodkin's Job, and the extraordinary "Sail 25". Can't remember the fourth tale, but for one of my own four favorites accept "Moon Moth", prestigiously anthologized.
More power to Mr. Vance, as long as he may live.
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